Library/PT 105/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

People once said Renaissance women had new intellectual freedom, but scholars like Joan Gibson show a different picture: wealthy girls learned more grammar and literature, yet were kept out of rhetoric and dialectic—the training for public speaking, debate, and professional life—which was mostly taught to men at universities. Women’s schooling aimed to make them good listeners and private companions, not public speakers or political thinkers, so even princesses lacked political training. Because educated women had few public roles, those who were learned were often called odd or masculine or praised only if modest; most of their work was literary (translations, poems, stories, letters) rather than philosophy or political writing.

Logic Breakdown

Look for the choice that pairs expanded access/opportunity for a group with simultaneous formal limits on their roles or advancement (more quantity but reduced scope).

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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26.

Which one of the following situations is most analogous to the one introduced in the second sentence of the passage?

Correct Answer
C
Option C parallels the passage's claim that educational access for some women increased while reforms simultaneously imposed limits on what they could do. Support from the passage: 'Joan Gibson argues that despite more widespread education for privileged classes of women, Renaissance educational reforms also increased restrictions on women.' And: 'Thus, humanist education for women encompassed literary grammatical studies in both classical and vernacular languages, while dialectic and rhetoric, the disciplines required for philosophy, politics, and the professions, were prohibited to women.' Option C ('additional workers are employed... prevented from rising above a certain level') mirrors 'more widespread education' (more entrants) paired with explicit prohibition on advancement (prevented from rising), so it is the best analogy.
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